1/23/2014 4:04 AM PST BY TMZ STAFF

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Law enforcement sources tell TMZ ... Justin blew a .04. That would not automatically make him a drunk driver -- IF he were 21 or older. But Justin is 19, and Florida has a zero tolerance for underage drinkers who drive ... and if he blows higher than a .02 it's an automatic license suspension. Remember, he was arrested for DUI for both drugs and alcohol. If booze and drugs impaired his driving -- even if it was just a sip of liquor -- he can be convicted of DUI.Justin Bieber was arrested for DUI early Thursday morning and it wasn't pretty -- cops say Justin was wasted and resisted arrest and cussed the cop out, dropping multiple F bombs ... TMZ has learned.

Justin posed for a smiley mug shot moments after the arrest -- while sporting a jail-issued orange jumpsuit.

Law enforcement tells us ... Bieber was busted in Miami Beach and it didn't end with DUI ... he was also busted for resisting arrest without violence, drag racing and driving on an expired license.

Law enforcement sources tell TMZ ... they believe Justin was under the influence of both drugs and alcohol.

In fact, officials held a news conference and said, "[Justin] made statements he had consumed some alcohol, been smoking marijuana and consumed some prescription medication."

According to the police report -- obtained by TMZ -- cops approached Bieber's car and they instantly realized he reeked of alcohol and had bloodshot eyes. He had a "stupor" look on his face.

The police report says ... Bieber was defiant from the get-go, yelling at the cops, "Why the f**k are you doing this?" He also yelled, "What the f**k did I do. Why did you stop me?"

When the officer tried to perform a routine pat down, Bieber said, "I ain't got no f**king weapons, why do you have to search me? What the f**k is this about?" Bieber claimed he wasn't drunk and coming back from recording music. That's not true, because we knew he was at a club.

Now the basis for the resisting arrest charge -- Before the pat down, as Bieber got out of the car, he "kept going into his pants pocket." The cop ordered him to put his hands on the vehicle, and Bieber initially complied but soon took his hands off the car, turned and then cussed out the cop. The cop then grabbed Justin by the right arm, Justin pulled his arm away, and said, "What the f**k are you doing?"

The report says Justin was driving between 55 and 60 MPH in a 30 MPH residential area.

Bieber is now in custody and is at the police department where he is being tested -- presumably to more precisely measure his blood alcohol level. Our law enforcement sources say Justin was given a field sobriety test at the scene ... and failed.

His next stop will be jail, where he will be booked and processed and bail will be set.

We're told Bieber had just left SET nightclub and was driving a yellow Lamborghini at the time cops spotted him in a residential neighborhood. Our sources say Justin's people actually blocked the street off so Bieber could drag race.

Sources say the person Justin was racing was also arrested. We're told that driver was Khalil, a well-known rapper on Def Jam Records. He was in a red Ferrari.

Parents: STOP RUINING YOUR CHILDREN

Jeremy Bieber -- Justin Bieber's father -- is at least partially, if not almost completely, responsible for his son's DUI arrest, and definitely has had a pretty heavy hand in helping to ruin both Justin Bieber's childhood and adolescent life.

Last night, while a lot of the world slept, Justin Bieber partied, and partied hard, and our sources say that Jeremy Bieber was there throughout the duration -- the drinking, the drug-taking, the street racing, and he was even confirmed to have helped coordinate the blocking of city streets for his son's drunken drag racing. ... Yet still people say "it's not the parents' fault."

To be clear, then, it's, what, OK for a 38-year-old man who's to damn well know better to participate in -- and, worse, encourage -- his or her offspring's reckless behavior? Give the green flag on actions that could result in the death of said child or another innocent person? Fine to make decisions that could alter, ruin, or end peoples' lives? WRONG.

Wrong. No father -- or person, for that matter -- of any moral fiber (especially one who claims to be heavily enveloped in religion and spirituality) would ever consider condoning this kind of behavior in any underaged teenager, let alone one that he, himself, sired.

The moral of the story is that Justin Bieber -- though an adult and ultimately responsible for his own actions -- is a product of his environment, and it's sadly, maddeningly apparent that his environment was and is no damn good.

Justin Bieber’s recent arrest
has sparked more than a few jokes about the future of the Beeb’s
career. While many of us shook our head at his antics, others apparently
used his run-in with the law as further proof that the Canadian
musician’s bad boy behaviors are a result of his friendships with Black
folks.

[Bieber] got arrested in Miami, and social media jokes
abound re: his “honorary Blackness,” feeling the effects of “hanging out
with too many Black folk” and how he’s “one of us.” Rob Ford has been
jokingly called “Toronto’s first Black mayor” after the crack-smoking
incident, and is now our “first Jamaican mayor” who’s being lauded for
“reaching out to the West Indian community.” Pardon me while I vomit.

She’s right. While many of us lambasted Sharon Osbourne for saying Bieber “doesn’t realize he’s White”
after he peed into a bucket and directed an expletive-filled rant
toward Bill Clinton, far too many of us are quick to bestow honorary
blackness on White folks who behave badly.

Need proof?

Bill Clinton is commonly referred to as “the first Black president”
because he played the saxophone, smoked weed, and regularly cheated on
his wife. Richie Incognito, the White NFL player accused of bullying his
Black teammate by lobbing racial slurs, was given a pass for his
behavior by his Black teammates who saw him as an “honorary Black man”
because he grew up poor. When Gwyneth Paltrow (and Madonna) dropped the
n-word, many scrambled to her defense because, as Beyonce’s BFF, she
somehow gets a “pass” to Black it up from time to time. David Beckham
was once called an honorary black man because he wore cornrows. Kim
Kardashian gets a “Black pass” because she has a thing for Black men.
Quentin Tarantino—who Neil Brennan (a White writer) called “the best Black screenwriter” in
Hollywood—has been given an honorary Black certificate because he drops
the n-word and made a film about slavery. As soon as Justin Timberlake
donned his cornrows and ditched N’Sync for Pharrell he was given the
title (never mind he left Janet hanging during that “wardrobe
malfunction” fiasco). Rob Ford has been called the first Black mayor of
Toronto by some because he smoked crack, and apparently, likes to speak
in a Jamaican accent when he’s drunk (which is a lot).

I could go on.

Bestowing the “honorary Black man/woman” title on someone seems all
fun and games until you really examine why the person is being labeled
as such in the first place.

Have these honorary Black people earned the title because they
advocate for equal rights, genuinely care about us and our issues, or
are actively working to make the world a better place for Black folks?

Nope.

Most of the people who get the honorary Black person title do so
because they’ve engaged in deviant behavior. While we’d rail against
White folks who view us through the offensive lens of negative
stereotypes, some of us will happily claim others who conform to those
same stereotypes—dancing, singing, rapping, getting arrested, growing up
poor—as “Black.”

But why? Is dysfunction and good rhythm all we have to offer the world?

Certainly not, but we also cannot call other people out on their
racist and prejudiced ideas if we continue to dabble in the same
problematic line of thinking

As Bee Quammie put it:

“The behaviours that La Beiba and Rob Ford exhibit are
common across all kinds of people, yet some Black folk seem quick to
take sole ownership of these pathologies like it’s all we have to offer.
La Beiba and Rob Ford ain’t no kin to me.”

To be clear, blackness is not something we can bestow on others. You
cannot rap, sing, or two-step your way into being Black—honorary or
otherwise. Getting caught up in negative or illegal behaviors does not
make you Black; it makes you human.

Law enforcement sources tell TMZ ... Justin blew a .04. That would not automatically make him a drunk driver -- IF he were 21 or older. But Justin is 19, and Florida has a zero tolerance

for underage drinkers who drive ... and if he blows higher than a .02 it's an automatic license suspension. Remember, he was arrested for DUI for both drugs and alcohol. If booze and drugs impaired his driving -- even if it was just a sip of liquor -- he can be convicted of DUI.

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